The Michigan Daily-Sunday, November 15, 1981-Page 5 THE PUZZLE --r---~u 375 N MAPLE 769-1300 n MAPLE I A SNPCTR MON i S2 1P" SAT SUN S2 3PM John CleeseLL AM RT Shelley Duvall 1:45 leA HLEEN "Rr4P Sean Connery 4:00 Katherine Helmond 7:00I e 9 +a T I R ilhin 1y duVl ZLUPFAUA With the world getting smaller and rapid transit sys- tems getting larger,,it won't be long before some of the world's cities run into one another. The following map is a composite of subway stops and rapid-transit stations from here to Hong Kong. We'd like you to match the cities with the stations by filling in the circles on the map with the number corresponding to the correct city listed below.. 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) 8) 9) 10) 11) 12) 13) Paris Munich Berlin Athens Hamburg Budapest Milan Rome Rotterdam Barcelona Lisbon Madrid Washington 14) 15) 16) 17) 18) 19) 20) 21) 22) 23) 24) 25) Mexico City Buenos Aires San Francisco Tokyo Philadelphia Boston Montreal Leningrad Moscow London New York Chicago EE MEA N I" ~ PLAZA 0EAK FERENC TER DE CASTILLA " .. AENID loin EMBARCADERO OMONIA SAVENIDA POTSDAMER y , .:LA PLATA PLATZ uu"mum WACKER DRIVE PADDINGTON -- . CENTRAAL DAIMON CA A LUNA (' -0 NEVSKI RJ>J"- -:. . ST. PAULI PROSPEKT H .IDA LG;,MARKET _ COPLEYDUOMO .-~ . - -": R O S S I O .FRONTENAC -L --EGORKY PARK --COLOSSEO KULTURY 0 0 " ils . BLEECKER '" " AUSTERLITZ BL EET - rL- FOGGY BOTTOM :":-: _L;:, L . . OLYMPIASTADION - .9 Roe Jone- - Li--~ - -j- -:- Roger Jones momou ' ss 50 *INIVI L ATIS ri 5r f.,761 9700 THEY LIVE STYLISH SOPHISTICATED LIVES. THEY ALSO HAVE THE SAME FEELINGS, PROBLEMS AND HEART BREAKS YOU HAVE! WED. SAT. SUN. $1.50 TIL 6:00 P.M. GLORIOUS! GENE SHAL(T1 I ROBERT DE NIRO 1:45 ROBERT DUVALL 700 F UNITE0 ARTISTSE -Two hours of non stop thrills" Rex Reed ___ A:AAON - pa RICH FM MERYL STREEP lheIWt~fCh Lieutenn Send your completed puzzle to the Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 by Wednesday of next week. One person will be selected at random from the correct entries to win a free Michigan Daily T-shirt. Fed up with these crazy puzzles? Would you like to get even with Don Rubin and win $10 to boot? Then send your original ideas for The Puzzle to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, 48109. All entries will become the p-operty of United Feature Syndicate, Inc. (You only win the big bucks if we use your puzzle idea.) LAST WEEK'S ANSWER: Finding the Kingdom of Tonga was the easy part. The island on the stamp was Tongatapu. Nuku'alofa, the capital, was a little harder. We preferred Pea (actually somewhat closer to the precise coordinates), but accepted both. The following people week s puzzle correctly: JACQUEUNE BISSET CANDICE BERGEN FRI-7:20, 9:40 - (R). SAT, SUN-1:20, 3:40, 7:20, 9:40 FRI-7:00, 9:25 SAT, SUN-1, 3:25, 7, 9:25 U {I U U C GI) U) WU 0 -4- answered last Karl Edelmann Tim Orel Jon Monroe Kirk Hornburg Daniel Herman Mike Buhler Suzi Weidenthal Adam Weisman Surrogate mother laws challenged, DETROIT (UPI) - A lawyer who has gained a national reputation for han- dling surrogate mother cases says it's time for new laws regarding paternity and custody of unborn children. Attorney Noel Keane of suburban earborn says the issue of a lawsuit he -iled in the case of a couple awaiting the birth of a child by a surrogate mother is simply "Who is the father of the child?" THE SUIT asks Wayne County Cir- cuit Judge Roman Gribbs to declare George Syrkowski of Dearborn Heights the father of a child conceived last March by artificial insemination and due to be delivered by Corinne Ap- pleyard about Dec. 17. The declaration is necessary, Keane said Friday, because it is illegal in Michigan to pay a mother to allow adoption of her child. The Syrokowskis are unable to have children themselves and agreed to pay Mrs. Appleyard $10,000 to carry and bear the child. INCLUDED IN the lawsuit were statements from the surrogate mother and the doctor who conducted the ar- tificial insemination, attesting to the procedure and the agreement. In a hearing Friday before Gribbs, Assistant Michigan Attorney General George Elworth argued that state law states that a child born as a result of ar- tificial insemination with the consent of the husband of the pregnant woman is automatically considered to be the husband's child. Keane said the consent of Roger Ap- pleyard for the artificial insemination to take place was not consent to become legal father of the child. He said the law cited by Elworth was aimed at cases where infertile husban- ds, after allowing their wives to become impregnated, might change their min- ds and decide they don't want to sup- port the child. "Michigan needs some new laws on this," he said. "This will set a precedent for a series of similar cases - eight or 10 of them - which we have coming up very soon." In 1945, the first atomic bomb was exploded above the desert near the Almagordo Air Force Base in New Mexico. - With Phillip Moll, harpsichordist Moray Welsh, cellist The acclaimed flutist in a special recital featuring the music of Handel, Couperin, and Bach. MO NDAY, NOVEMBER 30 RT-8:30 HILL AUDITORIUM LIMITED SEATING Tickets at $10.00, $9.00, $8.00, $6.00 Tickets at Burton Tower, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Weekdays 9-4:30, Sat. 9-12 (313)665-3717 61JjVIVE1 sITY &MUSICAL 80CIETY In Its 103rd Year I I Fire blacks out much of downtown Boston BOSTON (AP) - A manhole fire knocked out electricity yesterday to 6,500 customers in downtown Boston, and two-thirds of the area - including Chinatown and the red-light district - =could remain without power until today, officials said. "We don't expect. to have power Wstored until 9 or 10 a.m. Sunday mor- ing," said, Mike Monahan, a spokesman for Boston Edison. "We're just advising people to hang tight and bundle up." NO INJURIES were reported. Monahan said the fire was discovered in a manhole shortly before 1 a.m. The heat of the fire was so intense it melted seven cable connections that provided power in a wide area. Oficials don't know the cause of the fire. "The manhole: was a mess," said Monahan. The fire initially interrupted elec- tric service to some 6,500 Boston Edison customers in the heart of the city, in- cluding sections of the Tufts New England Medical Center, Boston Edison spokesman Walter Salvi said. The hospital continued normal operations with the help of emergency generators. Electricity was restored to half the affected area shortly before 10 a.m., in- cluding the downtown shopping area and Beacon Hill, where the state capital and numerous apartment buildings are. But the garment district, Chinatown and the Combat Zone - a section of adult movie houses and striptease cabarets - were expected to remain in darkness. rE bi I fa State must seek an alternative, say speakers (Continued from Page 1) These industries currently employ AMOND THE KEY elements in im- nment, private investors and the com- ealization of labor and transport 170,000 workers and by the year 2000, plementation of the plan, Russell said, munity. arriers. more than half a million persons will are support from local government, Democratic gubernatorial candidate According to Luria, neither the solar probably be working in these areas. worker input in the planning stages, the Zolton Ferency, who also attended the nergy industry nor mass transit would "This crisis is permanent and struc- attraction of private capital and central conference, fully endorsed Luria's and than aifi d criteria- but em- tural and will be with us for a while' planning between workers, the gover- Russell's proposals. tit tie specneu cr~ t, ULit ployment by manufacturers of processing engines, heavy oil recovery equipment, and steam injection pumps, which are all in short supply, would be ideal. noted Russell,who prior to becoming an economic consultant to the Michigan State Senate served as a policy analyst for Detroit City Council Member Ken Cockrel. 4 L,.......... o - - , Economist: Reagan .rogram working